By Diya Gupta, PhD researcher, Department of English – find her here.
“Choti yeh hai teri saanp ki hi lehar Dogana
Khati hun tere vaste main zahar Dogana
(This plait of yours is the wave of a serpent, Dogana
I take poison because of you, Dogana)”
– Lines from nineteenth-century Urdu Rekhti poet Insha Allah Khan
What do we know about the representation of same-sex romantic and sexual relations in early nineteenth-century north India? And how does this relate to the transnational realm of early twentieth-century democratic thought? A postcolonial conversation on recent publications by two outstanding postcolonial scholars revealed how love and desire, revolutionary ethics and aesthetics, connect these two worlds in the final King’s in Conversation with series for 2015/16.
Continue reading Loving, Living and Resisting: a Postcolonial Conversation